Menu
Content
Local Items
Help





|
Dublin
Georgia Statistical Data
The population of Dublin is approximately 16,312 (1990).
The approximate number of families is 6,495 (1990)..
The approximate number of employed is 19,359
The approximate per capita income is $17,439
The amount of land area in Dublin is 32.623 sq. kilometers.
The amount of surface water is 0.166 sq kilometers.
The distance from Dublin to Washington DC is 557 miles.
The distance to the
Georgia state capital is 123 miles. (as the crow flies)
Dublin is positioned 32.53 degrees north of the equator and 82.92 degrees west
of the prime meridian.

Laurens County History
by Harriett Claxton
Excerpted from The Official History of Laurens
County, Georgia: 1807-1941, 1987.
Note: Images on this page are from a Dublin
historian's postcard collection.
With the assistance of modern science we are able to ascertain
that our area was settled at least ten thousand years ago. Using a process known
as "carbon 14 dating," a by-product of atomic research, chemists have determined
that the Mound Builders were here at the time. Nobody knows who they were, where
they came from, where they went, or why they built the mounds. Historians think
they were early Indians, but the Indians who were here when the first white men
came knew no more about the Mound Builders than the white men did; in fact, the
Musgeeans (called Creeks by the British because they usually lived near creeks)
held them in superstitious awe and would not disturb them.
These mysterious builders evidently used the mounds for sentinel posts, burial
grounds, council meetings, chief's residence and religious worship. About four
miles south of Dublin on the banks of the Oconee River are two mounds. The
larger of the two commands a view of the river and the surrounding plains and is
the type of mound that the Indians built for signal fires and watchout posts.
The other is oval in shape and was either intended for the campsite of the Chief
of the tribe or for the council of the tribes, maybe as a peace-treaty mound.
The different types of flint arrows turned up by the plows in the area indicate
that it was the site of a council ground, since much of the flint is foreign to
the area.
Four miles north of Dublin on the Blackshear Ferry Road is a burial mound that
is situated near what is now believed to have been the Indian village, Kitchee.
Other mounds believed to be of Indian construction may be found near this
location.
An interesting though disputed theory is that the first white men to come
through this section were led by General Hernando DeSoto in April 1540. One
Spanish historian tells of the General's meeting a powerful chief of a country
called Ocute, which was inhabited by the Oconees, a tribe of Creek Indians. It
is possible that the people of Laurens County are now occupying the section
called Ocute and even that Dublin is built on or near the Indian village.
There are no authentic records that white men lived here during the Spanish
period. It is believed that the Spanish mission was located below the junction
of the Oconee and the Ocmulgee, in which case priests could have visited here.
For some unknown reason, the Indians in this section were unfriendly to the
Spaniards, and this probably is the reason for no Spanish settlements.
The charter given to the Trustees of Georgia in 1732 included all lands between
the Savannah and the Altamaha Rivers and their headwaters to the Atlantic Ocean.
The treaty signed with the Indians by the immigrants in 1733 allowed the
settlers to use the lands lying between the Oconee and Ogeechee Rivers. Further,
in Article VI is found this: "any runaway slave is to be returned by the Indians
and a reward is to be given to the Indians for his return, provided he was taken
on the farther side of the Oconee River."
The fine hunting grounds and fertile soil made this land congenial to Indian
tastes so there was in this Oconee region a rather heavy Indian population. They
remained undisturbed after the Spanish menace had passed until the last quarter
of the eighteenth century when white families began to push in. At first the
Indians showed no objection; in fact, these Lower Creeks were generally friendly
to whites, but when the number began to increase, their attitude changed. The
colonial government then built a few rude blockade forts on the Oconee and
Ocmulgee. These contained huts for the owners who could work in small clearings
nearby, guns in hand.
During the Revolutionary period, many Tories fled from the eastern part of
Georgia to the eastern side of the Oconee where the Indians were because the
Creeks had sided with the English during the War. When peace came, Tory lands
were confiscated; new treaties were made with the Indians; these pushed them
farther from the settlers. Then there was a rush of settlers to the Oconee. When
this land was surrendered by treaty to the State in 1783, immediately two
counties were created from it - Washington and Franklin. A part of what is now
Laurens - in fact, all of Laurens east of the Oconee, was included in the county
of Washington. About the time of this treaty, Laurens County began to be
settled.
To reward the brave patriots of the Revolution, a tract of land was given to
each for a new home to be located in the new counties. This was the Head Right
Land system, whereby every head of a family would have 200 acres of land, 50
additional acres for each member of his family, and 50 acres for each slave, not
exceeding ten. He must settle within six months - later extended to nine, and
the soldiers were to have 250 acres exempt from taxation for ten years.
As a result, in 1789, a number of settlers from North Carolina and Virginia
came. Many of these new settlers - some of them being of Scotch-Irish descent,
some of Huguenot descent - took up residence on the east banks of the Oconee
River. This was the "frontier line," as the Treaty of 1783 had made the Oconee
the boundary between the Whites and the Indians. From that time there was
trouble between the two: the settlers on the east side and the Indians on the
west side. The Indians would slip across the river and steal; the Whites would
retaliate. The Whites would entice the Indians across the river, make them drunk
and rob them; the Indians would in turn retaliate. Finally, in 1802, the
government extinguished the Creeks' title to the lands lying west of the River.
This land then was divided into Wayne, Wilkinson and Baldwin Counties and
distributed by land lottery. The part of Laurens County which is west of the
River came from Wilkinson County. Generally, then, the portion of land east of
the River was Head-Right Land Grant, and the portion west of the Oconee was of
the Land Lottery System.
At the close of the Revolutionary War, Georgia had only eight counties, but soon
protests were effective in having more counties in order to centralize business.
On December 10, 1807, the General Assembly passed an act to lay out and identify
new counties out of the counties of Baldwin and Wilkinson. One of these new
counties was to be called Laurens in honor of John Laurens of Revolutionary War
fame. The new county was to consist of "all that part of the Wilkinson County
lying between the Oconee and the Ocmulgee Rivers, beginning at the mouth of Big
Sandy Creek on the Oconee River."
The population of the County was 1,795, of which 485 were slaves. The next year,
on December 13, by an act of the General Assembly, about one-half of the
territory of Laurens was taken to form Pulaski County. This left Laurens
comparatively small, and the people were dissatisfied; so in 1811, portions of
Washington and Montgomery Counties on the west side of the Oconee were taken and
given to Laurens. In this form it remained until 1858 when an Act was approved
giving a strip of the eastern portion of Laurens County to Johnson County - two
miles wide and nine miles long, extending from the Dublin-Wrightsville road to
the Emanuel County line and to the original eastern boundary of Laurens. A minor
change was made in 1906 to correct a matter of disputed territory - the only
alteration from this to the present form.
The first county seat, Sumpterville, was located on the west side of the Oconee
River on Turkey Creek. It was the home of Major Peter Thomas and eight miles
west of the present city of Dublin. The General Assembly of 1807 passed an act
that "the site for the public buildings in and for the county of Laurens shall
be in the town called and known by the name of Sumpterville." Since the forests
and the soil in this area were extremely good, this was the most populous part
of the county. Then, in 1811, when the portions of Washington and Montgomery
Counties were added to Laurens on the east side of the Oconee River, it was
necessary to change the seat to a location nearer the center of the county. As a
result, the county purchased from Joseph L. Hill the present site for the city
of Dublin - west of the river adjacent to the Sand Bar on the east. The
consideration was "one hundred dollars cash in hand paid for one hundred acres."
The next December, the General Assembly authorized public buildings for the new
county on the tract.
The town of Dublin was incorporated by the Assembly on December 9, 1812. It may
have been the smallest town ever created by the Legislature: "The incorporation
shall extend to and include all the inhabitants living within 250 yards of Broad
Street and within 400 yards of the Court House." Legend has it that Jonathan
Sawyer, a pioneer citizen of the county was granted the privilege of naming the
new county seat, and he named it Dublin in honor of the capital of his native
land, Ireland. The site chosen has been proved to be a good location with many
advantages for growth and development.
When the War of 1812 was being fought, the settlers along the Oconee were just
making good headway in building homes and clearing the farmland. They became
most anxious about the threat of Indian attacks, but actually they had little
involvement in the War. Indian troubles continued after the War from time to
time until after 1828 when Andrew Jackson became President with the avowed
intention of moving the Indians across the Mississippi.
After the War of 1812, there were years of prosperity; Florida had been
purchased by the U.S. Government, so there was no more Spanish menace. The wave
of population swept from the east and southeast to northwest.
In 1821, Dublin was larger than Macon and contained "a courthouse, a jail, an
academy, thirty-five houses and stores." Trails had become roads; instead of
paying road tax, the "able bodied effective white male inhabitants, mulattoes,
free Negroes and slaves from the age of sixteen to fifty" worked the roads. Corn
was the universal crop throughout the county. Much corn was used to make whiskey
since the small farmer had no slaves to produce cotton and had to use his extra
corn in this way to secure some cash. A large production of cotton in the
northern part of the county by the men owning slaves led to the building of
comfortable homes and sizable estates. In the southern part of the county, the
settlers were few and far between and made a living with cattle, sheep, cows and
hogs.
In the latter thirties, the state was giving its thoughts to the construction of
railroads. A company proposed a line through Laurens and Dublin, but some of the
citizens feared an invasion of rights and refused to give the right of way. So
the Oconee River continued its importance in the commerce of the area.
Slavery was a national institution, and although most of the people in Laurens
County did not own slaves, they were loyal to the principle of slavery and
resented any disrupting influences of the Abolitionists. In 1845, there were
3,258 whites and 2,760 slaves in the county. Dublin at this time had "a good
courthouse, several stores, 65 houses and 180 inhabitants."
By the fourth decade, lumbering was the principle industry and a half dozen
sawmills were operating in the county. By 1850, Dublin was the market of a
splendid agricultural section with cotton the main article of sale. Sheep
raising was also important as a part of the economy and wool was a staple of
commerce.

By: Mrs. Edward B. Claxton, III, Laurens County Historical Society, rev. 8/7/91
|
Dublin Jobs Classifieds
4 Jul 2008 at 10:11am
Sales / Franchise - Snap-on Tools - Franchise Systems - Dublin, GA
Program Manager II: - Parker Hannifin Corporation - Dublin, GA
Manufacturing Engineer # 6106 - CNH - Dublin, GA
ACADEMIC INSTRUCTOR, P/T - Wheeler Correctional Facility - Alamo, GA
Account Representative/Technical Sales Representative- Hercules Incorpo - Hercules Incorporated - Dublin, GA
Floating Pharmacist - KMart Pharmacy - Dublin, GA
Sales/Franchise - Snap-on Tools - Dublin, GA
Merchandising Execution Associate - Home Depot - Dublin, GA
Restaurant General Manager -up to $60K Total Comp - LOVE'S TRAVEL STOPS & COUNTRY STORES - Dublin, GA
Restaurant General Manager - $45K to $55K Compensation Package - Love's Travel Stops & Country Stores, Inc. - Dublin, GA
Seach More Jobs All -medical -medicine -healthcare -hospital -nurse jobs in dublin, ga | Inde...
Statistics
Total
Total posts 1230
Total topics 320
Total announcement 0
Total sticky 0
Total members 160
|